Nevada Code § 543.590

Survey and report of problems; assistance in preliminary planning; adoption of master plan
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1. After a district has been established,
the board shall cause its chief engineer or qualified private engineers or
consultants to make a survey of the problems of controlling floods in the district
and to prepare a report setting forth:
(a) A description of existing facilities for the
control of floods in the area.
(b) Recommendations as to cooperation between the
district and the owner or owners of the facilities.
(c) Recommendations for the construction or other
acquisition of facilities to carry out the purpose of the district, with a
preliminary plan therefor.
(d) A description of the property proposed to be
acquired or damaged in the performance of work.
(e) A map showing the boundaries of the district
and location of the work proposed to be done.
(f) A map showing the hydrographic areas to be
used by the district for planning and acquisition of projects and improvements.
(g) Such other facts and information as the board
may request.
2. In the preparation of the report, the
Director of the State Department of Conservation and Natural Resources and the
Division of Public and Behavioral Health of the Department of Human Services
may assist in preliminary planning by:
(a) The assignment of technical, professional and
administrative personnel.
(b) Providing information for engineering and
other planning.
(c) Acting as coordinator and liaison between the
district and participating local, state and federal agencies.
Money
expended in preliminary planning may, upon application to the Director of the
State Department of Conservation and Natural Resources and to the Division of
Public and Behavioral Health, be refunded, if money for these purposes has been
appropriated by the Legislature.
3. The chief engineer for the district
shall then prepare for each hydrographic area a master plan for the control of
floods which must set forth the most effective structural and regulatory means
for correcting existing problems of flooding within the area and dealing with
the probable effects of future development, taking into consideration the
recommendations submitted in the report. In preparing the master plan, the
chief engineer shall incorporate insofar as possible the planning completed or
undertaken by the county, each city all or part of whose territory is included
in the area, and any private engineer or developer for any part of the area.
The master plan may include as separate elements the immediate needs,
indicating their relative priority, and other future needs. The master plan may
also include bridge structures that may become necessary as a result of the
implementation of the master plan.
4. When a master plan satisfactory to the
board, and after review by the Director of the State Department of Conservation
and Natural Resources, is available, it must be tentatively adopted. A public
hearing on the proposed work must be scheduled and notice of the hearing given
by publication. After hearing and any adjournments thereof which may be ordered,
the board may either require changes to be made in the master plan as the board
considers desirable or the board may approve the tentative master plan as
prepared. If changes are ordered a further hearing must be held pursuant to
notice given by publication.
5. The county and each city all or part of
whose territory is included within each hydrographic area shall then hold a
public hearing to consider adopting the tentative master plan as a component of
its master plan pursuant to chapter 278 of
NRS. The master plan or its parts for that hydrographic area do not become
final until adopted by the county and each city.

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